...Muhammad ibn Ya'qub al-Kulayni - may God be pleased with him - from `Ali ibn
Ibrahim, from his father, from Ibn Mahbub, from Abu 'Abd Allah (A.S.) that he (A.S.)
said: "Verily, it is mentioned in the Book of 'Ali that of all mankind the
prophets undergo the severest of trials, and after them the awsiya', and after
them the elect to the extent of their nobility. Indeed, the believer undergoes
trial in proportion to his good deeds. So one whose faith is sound and whose
deeds are good, his trials are also more severe. That is indeed because God
Almighty did not make this world a place for rewarding the believer and
punishing the unbeliever. And one whose faith is feeble and whose (good) deeds
are few faces fewer tribulations. Verily, tribulations hasten towards the
believer with greater speed than rainwater towards the earth's depths.1
Exposition:
Some have said by nas (people, mankind) in this noble tradition and its like are
meant perfect human beings (kamilun) such as the prophets and the awsiya', and
that in reality it is they who are the nas, whereas other people are lil-nas
(for the people), as mentioned in some traditions. However, that interpretation
does not apply here and it seems proper that mankind and people in general
should have been meant in this place. This is evident from the other traditions
of this chapter of al-Kafi, and if it has been said in some traditions that by
nas are meant the kamilun, it does not mean that the word has this meaning in
every place that it occurs. Also, bala' means trial, test and examination, and
it applies to the good as well as the bad among people, and the lexicographers
have stated this expressly. Al-Jawhari in al-Sihah says in this regard: And God
Almighty' says: ( ... And that He may try the believers with a fair trial)
(8:17) All that with which God, to Whom belongs Glory and Majesty, tries His
servants is bala' and ibtila', whether it is one of the diseases and ailments,
or adversities like poverty, humiliation and loss of worldly fortunes, or a
thing of an opposite kind such as acquisition of power and glory, wealth,
riches, high status, honour, and the like. However, whenever bala', baliyyah or
ibtila' and the like are mentioned, it is the former kind of things that are
meant.
Amthal means `nobler and better: Hence, the phrase means that one who is better
and nobler after the prophets and the awsiya' has to face a severer kind of bala'
than the others, and those who are better and nobler than others after them have
to face a severer degree of trial. The degree of the severity of bala' is in
accordance with the decree of merit. This kind of expression (i.e., like ) does
not exist in Persian.
`Sukhf' means `feebleness of the rational faculty' or `foolishness', as
mentioned by al-Sihah, and other lexicographical works. Qarar means `resting
place,' as mentioned in the dictionaries: The apology means that in the same way
as the earth is the resting place where rainwater comes to rest and abide, the
believer is the resting place of sufferings and tribulations, which rush toward
him, come to rest in him, and do not depart from him. God willing, we will
mention that which is needed for the exposition of this noble tradition in the
course of a few sections.
The Meaning of Trial:
Let it be known to you that the human souls exist at a level of potentiality
from the beginning of their origin, their attachment to the bodies, and their
descent to the realm of corporeal existence (mulk), in respect of all things,
including knowledge, good and evil traits, and all kinds of perceptive and
behavioural faculties. Gradually they move from potentiality to actuality with
the grace of God, the Almighty and the Sublime. At first, weak impressions
related to particulars (as opposed to universals) emerge in the soul, such as
impressions of touch and other outward senses, moving from the lower to the
higher. Following that, the inward perceptions also arise in it. However, all
its faculties exist only at a level of potentiality, and they do not grow
without proper stimulation. For instance, if the base kind of faculties come to
dominate it, it becomes disposed to ugliness and evil, for its inner powers,
such as shahwah (lust), ghadab (anger), etc., impel it towards sin,
licentiousness, aggression and tyranny. After following them for some time it
grows into a strange monster and a highly grotesque devil.
However, since the grace and mercy of God Almighty have been accompanying the
Children of Adam since eternity, He bestowed upon them two educators and
teachers which are like two wings with which they can fly from the depths of
ignorance, defectiveness, ugliness and wretchedness to the heights of knowledge,
perfection; beauty and felicity, and deliver themselves from the narrow valley
of nature to reach the expansive and open horizons of the realms of the spirit (malakut).
The first of these is the faculty of intellect and discernment, which is the
inner teacher; and the second, the outward teacher, is represented by the
prophets and the divine guides who shove the path of felicity as distinct from
the ways of wretchedness. None of these two can singly achieve this end without
the other. For the human intellect by itself can neither identify the paths of
felicity and wretchedness nor find the way to the hidden world and the realm of
Hereafterly existence. Similarly, the guidance of the prophets cannot be
effective without the exercise of the discerning faculties of the intellect.
Thus God, the Beneficent and the Sublime, gave them these two educators so that
through them all the potentialities and hidden faculties and capacities, latent
in the human soul, should be realized and actualized. God Almighty blessed them
with these two great bounties in order to try and test human beings, for it is
through these bounties that individual human beings are separated into the
felicitous and the wretched, the obedient and the rebellious, the perfect and
the defective. And so the Great Wali of God said:
And by Him Who sent him (the Prophet (pbuh&hh)) with the Truth, you shall indeed
be mixed and intermingled and then separated in the sieve (of Divine trial and
tribulation)?2
In the noble al-Kafi, in the chapter relating to Divine test and trial (bab al-tamhis
wa al-'imtihan), Ibn Abi Ya'fur reports al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) as having said:
It is inevitable that mankind should be purified, separated and sieved so that a
great number is excluded by the sieve.3
Also al-Kulayni reports with his isnad from Mansur the following tradition:
Al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) said: "O Mansur! Indeed this affair (i.e. the
appearance of al-Mahdi (A.S.)) will not come to you except after despair and
not, by God, until you have been separated, and not, by God, until you have been
purified, and not, by God, until the wretched attain wretchedness and the
felicitous attain felicity."4
In another tradition, Abu al-Hasan (A.S.) is reported to have said:
You shall be purified in the way gold is purified.5
In al-Kafi, bab al-'ibtila' wa al-'ikhtibar, the following tradition is reported
with isnad from al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.):
He said: "There is no qabd (extension) and bast (contraction) except that in it
there is for God a purpose, a decree, and a trial.6
In another tradition he is (A.S.) reported to have said:
Indeed there is no qabd and bast in that which God has commanded or forbidden
except that there is in it from God a trial and a decree?7
Qabd means imsak (withholding), man` (obstruction, prevention) and akhdh
(seizure). Bast is nashr (unfolding, spreading, resurrection) and 'ata' (gift,
bestowal). Hence every gift, expansion and obstruction, and every command,
prohibition and duty is for the sake of trial.
Thus we came to know that the sending of prophets and the revelation of heavenly
scriptures is all for the sake of the separation of humanity, of the separation
of the wretched from the happy and the felicitous, of the obedient from the
sinful. And the meaning of Divine testing and examination is this very
separation of men from one another, not the knowledge of their separateness,
because the knowledge of God Almighty is pre-eternal; it encompasses all things
prior to their creation. The hukama' have elaborately discussed the reality of
trial and ibtila' and it is beyond the scope of this exposition to mention their
opinions.
In any case, the result of this trial and examination is the separation of the
felicitous from the wretched. In the course of it the proof (hujjah) of God is
established against the creatures. Thereafter, their life, felicity and
salvation, or their destruction and damnation occurs after the establishment of
the proof and testimony (bayyinah), and there remains no room for objection for
anyone. One who attains felicity and eternal life does so through Divine succour
and guidance, for God has bestowed all the means of attaining them. Also, one
who earns wretchedness and falls into destruction, following Satan and his
carnal self, his wretchedness and damnation are also earned by him out of his
own free will, because he does so despite the availability of all the means of
guidance and felicity. The conclusive proof of God is established against him
and there is no room for any pretext. Hence the Qur'an says:
﴾For it (the soul) is what it has earned and against it is what it has
merited. (2:286)﴿
The Prophets and Divine Trial:
It was mentioned earlier that every act of the human being, or rather every
event that occurs in the realm of the body and is related to the soul's
perceptions, leaves a kind of impression in the self. This is true of both good
and evil deeds (whose impression upon the soul is mentioned in traditions as the
appearance of a `white dot' or a `black dot' respectively) as well as of
pleasures and pains. For instance, every experience of pleasure, derived either
from food, drink, sex or something else, leaves an impression upon the soul and
creates or increases the love and attachment for that kind of, pleasure in the
soul. The more that one plunges into such pleasures and lusts, the greater
becomes the self's love and attachment for this world and its reliance upon it.
Thus the self is nourished with the love of the world and trained in accordance
with it. The greater the sensual pleasures that it derives, the stronger become
the roots of this love; and the more the available means of comfort and luxury,
the sturdier becomes the tree of attachment to the world. And the. more the
soul's attention is directed towards the world, the greater is proportionately
its negligence toward God and the world of the Hereafter. Thus when this
reliance upon the world becomes complete, the soul assumes a worldly and
materialistic form, and the absence of attention towards God Almighty and the
'realm of His munificence and bounty also becomes total and complete. It is
about such a soul that, the Qur'an says:
﴾...He inclined towards the earth and followed his lust. (7:176)﴿
The inevitable result of this inner immersion in the sea of pleasure and lust is
the love of the world, and the love of the world creates antipathy towards that
which is unlike it; attention towards the corporeal realm (mulk) brings
negligence towards the spiritual world (malakut).
On the contrary, if one has a bad and painful experience of something, the
impression of that experience creates an antipathy in the soul. The stronger
that impression is, the greater is that inward antipathy. For instance, if after
moving to a city one has to face there numerous torments and ailments and
undergo outer and inner adversities, he will inevitably abhor that place. The
greater the number of adversities that he faces therein, the more will be his
abhorrence for that place. If he knows a better place, he will migrate to it,
and if he is unable to make the journey, his heart will migrate and go out to
the city of his liking.
Thus if a man faces adversities, pain and torments in this world and is
overtaken therein by waves of calamities and tribulations, he will inevitably
come to resent it. His attachment to it will diminish and he will come to
distrust it. If he believed in another world, a vast world free of every kind of
pain and grief, he will inevitably want to migrate to it, and if he were unable
to make the journey physically, he will send his heart out to it.
Moreover, it is evident that all the spiritual, moral and behavioural evils
arise from the love of the world and negligence of God Almighty and the
Hereafter. The love of the world is the source of all sins, in the same way as
the love of God, the aspiration for the eternal abode of His bounty, the
renunciation of the world and absence of reliance upon and trust in its
adornments are the source of all spiritual cures and moral and behavioural
reform.
After these preliminaries we come to know that whenever God Almighty has a
greater consideration and love for someone, and when someone is the object of
the mercy of His Sacred Essence to a greater extent, He restrains him from this
world and its charms with the waves of calamity and tribulation, so that his
soul turns away in disgust from the world and its adornments and turns his face
and his heart, to the extent of his faith, toward the world of the Hereafter. If
there weren't any other reason except this one for endurance of severe
calamities it would have been sufficient, and a noble tradition also points
towards this matter.
Al-'Imam al-Baqir (A.S.) said "Verily, God Almighty treats the believer with
tribulations in the same way as a man treats his family with gifts after an
absence (upon a journey), and He restrains him from the world in the same way as
the physician prescribes restraints for the sick man."8
The same thing is said in another hadith, and one should not imagine that God's
love and the great care of His Sacred Essence for some people is - God be our
refuge - extravagant and pointless. Rather, with every step that a faithful
servant of God takes towards Him, God's grace turns towards him and the Almighty
moves closer to him. The similitude of the degrees of faith and the availability
of the means of Divine succour is that of a man moving with a lamp in darkness;
with every step that he takes forward, some more of the path in front of him is
illuminated, which allows him to take another step forward. With every step that
a man takes forward on the path of the Hereafter, that path appears clearer to
him and God's grace upon him increases, preparing the means of attention towards
the world of Divine proximity and of antipathy towards the world of separation
and distance.
The pre-eternal grace of God Almighty upon the prophets and the awliya' is on
account of His pre-eternal knowledge of their obedience during their terms of
duty. For instance, if you have two children about whom you have prior knowledge
in their childhood that one of them will bring you satisfaction while the other
will grow up to cause you displeasure and resentment, your love for the obedient
child would be greater from the very beginning.
God's Remembrance:
Another point relating to the severity of the tribulations of the elect among
God's servants is that they are made to remember God on account of these
adversities and tribulations and to pray and lament in front of His Sacred
Essence. This makes them accustomed to remember Him and keep their thoughts busy
with Him. It is natural for human beings to seek and learn upon what they think
is a source of support in times of 'adversity. In times of comfort and welfare
they forget and neglect it. And since the elect know no source of support other
than God, their attention turns towards Him, they putting their sole reliance in
His sacred station, and God Almighty, also, with the love that He has for them,
prepares the means of that undivided attention and reliance. However, this, as
well as the foregoing point, is not true of the prophets and the perfect awliya',
for their station is too high in sanctity and their heart too firm in faith for
them to develop attachment for worldly things on account of such things (as
comfort and welfare) or for them to waver in their sole reliance upon God. This
may be so because the prophets and the perfect awliya' have, through their
inward light and spiritual experience, ascertained that God Almighty has no
regard for this world and its adornments and that everything therein is base and
lowly in the eyes of His Sacred Essence, and for this reason they have preferred
poverty to wealth, tribulation to comfort and ease, and adversity to that which
is unlike it. Several noble traditions also support this view.
It is mentioned in the hadith that Gabriel brought the key of the earth's
treasures to the Seal of the Prophets (pbuh&hh) and said to him (pbuh&hh) that
should he (pbuh&hh) accept it, nothing would diminish from his (pbuh&hh)
Hereafterly stations. But the Prophet (pbuh&hh) did not accept it for the sake
of humility before God Almighty and chose poverty.
In the noble al-Kafi, al-Kulayni, with a chain of transmitters reaching up to
al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.), reports the Imam (A.S.) as having said:
Indeed God has so little regard for the unbeliever that should he ask of Him the
world and that which is in it, He would give that to him.9
And this is due to the worthlessness of the world in the eyes of the Almighty.
It is mentioned in the hadith that from the time that the Almighty created the
corporeal world, He did not look at it with favour.
Another point related to the severity of the believer's tribulations that has
been mentioned in traditions is that there are certain stations for the
believers which they cannot attain without undergoing suffering, pain and
affliction. It is possible that these afflictions are the corporeal forms of the
degrees of renunciation of the world and devotion to God, and it is also
possible that these sufferings have celestial forms (suwar-e malakuti) which
cannot be realized without their occurrence in the corporeal world and
afflictions therein. Al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.), in a noble tradition of al-Kafi
with a continuous chain of transmission going up to him, states:
Verily, the servant has certain stations near God that cannot be realized
without one of these two attributes: either the loss of his wealth or affliction
in his body. 10
In a tradition relating to the martyrdom of the Doyen of the Martyrs (al-'Imam
al-Husayn) (A.S.) it is mentioned that he (A.S.) saw the Prophet (pbuh&hh) in a
dream. The Prophet (pbuh&hh) said to that mazlum, "There is a station for you in
the Paradise which you cannot attain except through martyrdom." The celestial
form of martyrdom cannot be attained without its occurrence in the corporeal
realm, as has been demonstrated in the higher sciences. It is mentioned in
mutawatir traditions that for every action there is a corresponding form in the
other world, and al Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) is reported to have said in al-Kafi
that:
The greatness of man's reward goes with the greatness of suffering, and God did
not love a people but that He subjected them to suffering.11
There are many traditions containing this theme.
The Prophets' Suffering:
The great muhaddith al-Majlisi, upon whom be God's mercy, says:
These traditions relating to the tribulations of the prophets, which have been
narrated both through Sunni and Shi'i chains of transmission (turuq), clearly
indicate that the prophets and the awliya' differ from others in respect of
ailments and bodily afflictions. Rather, they have a greater right than others
to suffer on account of their great reward which is responsible for the
loftiness of their stations. And this suffering is not only not contrary to
their station, it even causes the confirmation of their affair. Should they not
undergo afflictions, despite the manifestation of miracles and extraordinary
things at their hands, people might say such things about them as the Christians
did about their prophet. This explanation is also mentioned in traditions.
The subtle researcher and the great, sacred philosopher al Tusi, may God fill
his grave with aroma, states in al-Tajrid: "Of the things that the prophets
should be free from is that which is regarded as abhorrent." And the `Allamah of
the `ulama' of Islam (al-`Allamah al-Hilli), may God be pleased with him, adds
in Sharh al-Tajrid that the prophets should be free from such abhorrent diseases
as absence of urinary control, leprosy and leukoderma, for their abhorrent
character is contrary to the aim of prophecy.
This writer says: The station of prophethood is subject to spiritual levels and
excellences and has no relation to corporeality. Hence physical diseases and
defects do no harm to the spiritual station of the prophets and affliction with
abhorrent diseases diminishes nothing from the sublimity and greatness of their
station, although they may not contribute in a way of confirmation to their
(already established) excellences and degrees of sublimity. But that which these
two researchers have said is also not devoid of validity. This is because the
common people cannot make a distinction between the two stations (of
spirituality and corporeality) and imagine that physical defectiveness is
related or caused by spiritual defectiveness. Hence they consider some defects
as being contrary to the high and great station of the prophets. Hence Divine
grace dictates that the prophets who are messengers and bringers of Divine
shari'ah should not be afflicted with such diseases as are considered disgusting
and abominable by the people. Therefore, the absence of this kind of affliction
is not because it is harmful to the station of prophethood, but for the sake of
maximizing the effectiveness of the prophetic mission of communicating the
Divine teachings (tabligh). Hence there is nothing wrong if some prophets
without a shari'ah, great awliya' and the faithful are afflicted with this kind
of afflictions, as in the case of Hadrat Ayyub (Job) and Habib al-Najjar. There
are many traditions concerning the affliction of Hadrat Ayyub (A.S.), of which
are the following two:
'Ali ibn Ibrahim in a long tradition narrates on the authority of Abu Basir that
al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) said: "...Then his whole body, excepting his, intellect
and his eyes, was subjected to the disease. Then Iblis blew upon it and it
became a single wound extending from his head to feet. He (Job) remained for a
period in that condition, praising and thanking God, until it became infested
with worms. Whenever a worm fell off from his body, he would put it back, saying
to it, "Return to your place, from where God created you." And it began to
stench until his townsfolk expelled him from his town and his food came from the
garbage thrown outside the town."
In al-Kafi, al-Kulayni reports from Abu Basir that he asked al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.)
about the verse, "When thou recitest the Qur'an, seek refuge in God. from the
accursed Satan, he has no authority over those who believe and trust in their
Lord; (his authority is over those who take him for their guardian and ascribe
associates to God) (16:98-100)" The Imam said, "O Abu Muhammad, by God, He gives
authority to him (Satan) over the believer's body but not over his faith (din).
He gave him (Satan) authority over Ayyub and Satan disfigured him physically,
but He did not give authority to him over his faith. And He does give him
authority over the faithful's bodies but not over their faith."
Najiyah says, "I said to Abu Ja'far (A.S.) that al-Mughirah says that a believer
is never afflicted with leprosy, leukoderma and such other ailments (is that
true?) The Imam replied, `Didn't he know that the Sahib Ya Sin (Habib al-Najjar,
the man mentioned in Surat Ya Sin) was mutilated (mukanna')?' He (A.S.) closed
his fingers and said, `It is as if I see him go to his people in his mutilated
state (takannu') to warn them and come back the next day, when they killed him.'
Then he added, `Verily, the believer suffers all kinds of afflictions and dies
in all manners of dying except suicide.' "12
`Sahib Ya Sin is Habib al-Najjar and takannu` (the word is with nun in most of
the manuscripts), according to al-Majlisi, means shortening and mutilation. He
adds that it was probably leprosy which had resulted in the shortening of his
fingers. However, this, as well as many other ahadith, indicate that the
believers and prophets are sometimes afflicted with abominable diseases on
account of some higher expediency, although there are some other traditions
which negate the disfigurement of Hadrat Ayyub's body and its petrifaction, and
not much benefit lies in discussing them further with a view to affecting a
reconciliation. On the whole, these kind of diseases do no harm to the condition
of believers and do not diminish anything from the station of the prophets (A.S.)
rather, they lead to the elevation of their station, and God Almighty knows best
the truth.
The World is Not a Place of Reward or Punishment:
Let it be known to you that this world, due to its defective, feeble and weak
nature, is neither the abode of the reward of God Almighty nor the place of His
chastisement and punishment. This is so because the abode of Divine munificence
is a realm whose bounties are pure, unadulterated with torment, and its comforts
are not mixed with pain and grief. Such bounties are not possible in this world,
which is an abode where contradictories throng together and each of whose
bounties is mixed with numerous kinds of pains, hardships and torments. Rather,
as the philosophers have said, pleasure in this world lies in avoiding pain. It
may be said that even its pleasures cause pain and every one of its pleasures is
followed by pain and hardship. Rather, the very material of this world lacks the
capacity to accept absolute goodness and unadulterated bounty. In the same way,
its pains and hardships, torments and punishments are also mixed; each of its
pains and hardships carries within itself some goodness and bounty, and none of
its afflictions and adversities is unmixed. The very material of this world
lacks the capacity to accept pure, absolute punishment, whereas the abode of
Divine chastisement is a place where punishment is pure and absolute; its pains
and afflictions are not like those of this world, which while they afflict one
member of the body are absent from the other members. While the healthy members
are in comfort and ease, the afflicted member suffers pain and agony. The noble
tradition partly refers to what we have stated here when it says:
That is, the reason that the believer is afflicted in this world with
tribulation is that God Almighty has made it neither the place of His reward for
the believer nor the place of chastisement for the infidel. This world is the
abode of duty and the farm of the Hereafter. It is a place of trade and earning
whereas the Hearafter is the abode of reward and punishment, of bounty and
damnation.
Those who expect that God Almighty would immediately get hold of one who commits
some sin or indecency in this world or perpetrates some injustice or aggression
against someone, and cut his hand off and expunge him from the realm of
existence, are unaware that their expectation is contrary to this world's order
and opposed to God's wont and sunnah. Here is the place of trial and the zone of
the separation of the wretched from the felicitous and the sinful from the
obedient. Here is the realm of the manifestation of deeds, not the abode of the
emergence of the results of personal deeds and qualities. If occasionally God
Almighty does take hold of an oppressor, it may be said that it is due to the
Almighty's mercy for that oppressor (for it stops him from sinning further).
For, when God Almighty leaves the sinful and the tyrants to themselves, His
wrath takes the form of istidraj, the gradual seizing.
Hence God Almighty declares.
(And those who cry lies to Our signs), We will draw them on little by little
whence they know not; and I respite them - assuredly My guile is firm.
(7:182-183)
And He also says:
﴾And let not the unbelievers suppose that the respite We grant them is
better for them; We grant them respite only that they may increase in sin; and
there awaits them a humiliating chastisement.(3:178)﴿
In Majma` al-bayan, this tradition is cited from al-Imam al-Sadiq (A):
The Imam (A.S.) said: "When a person commits a sin and the bounty (that he
had received) is renewed for him, he leaves off asking for forgiveness (istighfar),
and this is al-'istidraj (as mentioned in verse 7 :182)."
At the end of the noble tradition, the Imam (A.S.) says:
...And one whose faith is feeble and his intellect is weak, his tribulation
is also slight.
This shows that tribulations are both bodily and spiritual, for the persons of
weak intellects and feeble sensibility are secure from spiritual tribulations
and intellectual suffering in proportion to their intellectual weakness and the
feebleness of their sensibility. On the contrary, those with more complete
intellects and acuter sensibility have to undergo spiritual tribulations more
intensely in proportion to the perfectness and acuteness of their intellect and
sensibility. Perhaps it was for this reason that the Holy Messenger (pbuh&hh)
said:
No prophet was tormented to the extent that I was.
This complaint of the Prophet (pbuh&hh) refers to this point, for whoever
perceives the greatness and glory of the Lord to a greater extent and knows the
sacred station of God Almighty more than others, he suffers more and is
tormented to a greater extent by the sins of the creatures and their offences
against the Lord's sanctity. Also, one who has a greater love and compassion for
the creatures of God is tormented to a greater extent by their crooked and
wretched condition and ways. And, of course, the Seal of the Prophets (pbuh&hh)
was more perfect in all these stations and higher than all of the prophets and
the awliya' in respect of his degree of excellence and perfection. Hence his
torment and suffering was greater than that of any one of them. There is also
another explanation of the Holy Messenger's statement, whose mention is not
appropriate for this place. And God knows best and to Him belongs all the
praise.
* Book: Forty Hadith (An Exposition on 40 ahadith narrated through the
Prophet (pbuhh&hh) and his Ahl al-Bayt (a.s.)).By Imam Ruhullah al-Musawi al-Khumayni.
Translated by: Mahliqa Qara'i (late) and Ali Quli Qara'i
1- Al-Kulayni, Usul
al-Kafi, vol. II, p.259, hadith No.29.
2- Nahj al-balaghah, Khutbah No.16.
3- Usul al-Kafi, vol II, p.370, hadith No.2.
4- Ibid., hadith No.3.
5- Ibid., hadith No.4:
6- Ibid., vol. I, p.152.
7- Ibid.
8- Ibid., vol. II, p.255, hadith No.17.